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61 upward(s)
adverb ((facing) towards a higher place or level: He was lying on the floor face upwards; The path led upwards.) navzgor* * *[ʌpwəd(z)]adverbkvišku, gor, navzgor (tudi figuratively); dalje, naprej; proti vodnemu toku, ob vodi navzgor; proti notranjosti dežele; proti (glavnemu) mestufrom 10 dollars upward(s) — od 10 dolarjev naprej, dalje (više)from the l6th century upward(s) — od 16. stoletja daljemen of forty and upward(s) — možje, stari 40 let ali večupward(s) cercle sport veletoč -
62 wake
I [weik] past tense - woke; verb(to bring or come back to consciousness after being asleep: He woke to find that it was raining; Go and wake the others, will you?) zbuditi (se)- wakeful- wakefully
- wakefulness
- waken
- wake up II [weik] noun(a strip of smooth-looking or foamy water left behind a ship.) vodna brazda* * *I [wéik]nounstraža; poetically bedenje; (Irska) straža, bedenje pri mrliču; pogrebščina, sedmina; history (plural) proščenje; letni sejemII [wéik]1.intransitive verb(tudi wake up) prebuditi se, zbuditi se, postati buden; bedeti, biti buden, ostati buden, čuti; figuratively vstati, oživeti; predočiti si; zavesti se; premakniti se, zganiti se; obsolete (ponoči) praznovati, slavitiall will wake from death ( —ali the dead) — religion vsi bodo vstali od mrtvih;2.transitive verb(tudi wake up) zbuditi, prebuditi; obuditi (od mrtvih); povzročiti; oživiti; spodbuditi (to, into k); bedeti pri ( a corps mrliču); poetically motiti, kaliti (mir itd.)to wake the echoes — dvigniti hrup, napraviti rabuko, hrumetiIII [wéik]nounnautical (vodna) brazda, vodni razor (izza ladje v vožnji); vzvalovana voda; vrtinec; aeronautics zračni vrtinec; figuratively sledin the wake of s.o. — po sledi, neposredno za kom; po zgledu kogato follow in s.o.'s wake — iti po stopinjah kake osebe -
63 wherever
1) (no matter where: I'll follow you wherever you may go; Wherever he is he will be thinking of you.) kamorkoli, kjerkoli2) ((to or in) any place that: Go wherever he tells you to go.) kamorkoli, kjerkoli* * *[wwərévə]adverbkje (kam) vendar; kjerkoli, koderkoli, kamorkoliwherever will you go? — kam vendar boš šel? -
64 be a law unto oneself
(to be inclined not to obey rules or follow the usual customs and conventions.) biti sam sebi zakon -
65 get after
(to follow: If you want to catch him, you had better get after him at once.) slediti -
66 get nowhere
(to make no progress: You'll get nowhere if you follow his instructions.) nikamor ne priti -
67 set the pace
(to go forward at a particular speed which everyone else has to follow: Her experiments set the pace for future research.) diktirati tempo -
68 tag along
( often with behind or with) (to follow or go (with someone), often when one is not wanted: We never get away from him - everywhere we go, he insists on tagging along (with us)!) slediti kot senca -
69 tag on
1) ((usually with at or to) to attach (something) to something: These comments weren't part of his speech - he just tagged them on at the end.) dodati2) (to follow (someone) closely: The child always tags on to his elder brother.) biti za petami
См. также в других словарях:
follow — [ˈfɒləʊ ǁ ˈfɑːloʊ] verb 1. [intransitive, transitive] to come or happen afterwards: • The company s decision to diversify follows a sharp decline in demand for its products. • As the recession worsened, further closures followed. 2.… … Financial and business terms
Follow-on — is a term used in the sport of cricket to describe a situation where the team that bats second is forced to take its second batting innings immediately after its first, because the team was not able to get close enough (within 200 runs) to the… … Wikipedia
Follow — Fol low, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Followed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Following}.][OE. foluwen, folwen, folgen, AS. folgian, fylgean, fylgan; akin to D. volgen, OHG. folg[=e]n, G. folgen, Icel. fylgja, Sw. f[ o]lja, Dan. f[ o]lge, and perh. to E. folk.] 1.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
follow — [fäl′ō] vt. [ME folwen < OE folgian, akin to Ger folgen & (?) Welsh olafiad, follower] 1. to come or go after 2. to go after in order to catch; chase; pursue 3. to go along [follow the right road] 4. to come or occur after in time, in a series … English World dictionary
follow — vb 1 Follow, succeed, ensue, supervene mean to come after someone or, more often, something. Although all of these verbs occur as transitives and intransitives, ensue and supervene are more commonly intransitive verbs. Follow is the general term… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
follow-up — follow up1 adj [only before noun] done in order to find out more or do more about something →↑follow up ▪ a follow up study on children and poverty follow up 2 follow up2 n 1.) [U and C] something that is done to make sure that earlier actions… … Dictionary of contemporary English
follow — ► VERB 1) move or travel behind. 2) go after (someone) so as to observe or monitor them. 3) go along (a route or path). 4) come after in time or order. 5) be a logical consequence. 6) (also follow on from) occur as a result of … English terms dictionary
follow-up — follow ,up noun 1. ) count or uncount something that is done in order to complete something: Everyone liked my proposal, but there hasn t been any follow up. The researchers conducted a follow up study two years later. a ) something that is done… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
follow-up — n. 1. a second (or subsequent) action to increase the effectiveness of an initial action. Also used attributively; as a follow up visit. Note: A follow up may be of various types. After a medical examination, a second examination (or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
follow — fol·low vt: to be in accordance with (a prior decision): accept as authoritative see also precedent compare overrule Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
follow — (v.) O.E. folgian, fylgan follow, accompany; follow after, pursue, also obey, apply oneself to a practice or calling, from W.Gmc. *fulg (Cf. O.S. folgon, O.Fris. folgia, M.Du. volghen, Du. volgen, O.H.G. folgen, Ger. folgen, O.N. fylgja to follow … Etymology dictionary